Description

Essentially a record of the touring Old Vic Company's Hamlet. To cut the Old Vic stage version to 90 minutes for television, tv director Ralph Nelson went to the "pirated" 1601 Quarto for guidance. That much shortened version, though often spoken of as a "bad" quarto, actually makes for an effective stage performance. As a part of the event, CBS published the television script for Hamlet in a handsomely printed volume on rag paper with original sketches. A foreword by the CBS president, Louis G. Cowan, testifies to the heroic efforts being made in those early days of commercial television to put worthwhile drama on the air. Besides the DuPont Show of the Month, which sponsored the Old Vic Hamlet, there were also Playhouse 90, the Armstrong Circle Theatre, United States Steel Hour, and others. Television lacked the technical sophistication of a modern program such as Miami Vice but it paid more than lip service to quality theatre. Perhaps the idea that mass audiences could be won over to Shakespeare was inherently quixotic anyway